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| Mark
I. Helbling, Professor |
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Mark
Helbling received his B.A. degree from the University of California
at Berkeley (1960) and his PhD. from the University of Minnesota
(1972). His teaching and research interests include African American
history and culture, the Harlem Renaissance, Cultural Theory, American
Literature-Twentieth Century and America and Africa. In addition
to teaching at the University of Hawaii (where he has received the
Presidential Citation for Meritorious Teaching) he has taught as
a Fulbright Scholar at the Faculte des Lettres (Tunis, Tunisia),
the National University (Abidjan, Ivory Coast), and the Johann Wolfgang
Goethe University (Frankfurt, Germany). His most recent book is
The Harlem Renaissance: The One and the Many, which won the
Baldridge Prize given by the Hawaii History Honor Society of the
American Historical Association. He has numerous chapters in various
books ("African Art and the Harlem Renaissance: Alain Locke, Melville
Herskovits, Roger Fry and Albert C. Barnes" in Leonard Harris ed.
The Critical Pragmatism of Alain Locke-1999, the most recent)
and has published articles in numerous journals: Prospects,
Ethnic Forum, Phylon, Research Studies, Polish
Review, and Negro American Literature Forum as well as
poetry and short stories. Professor Helbling has lectured in Europe,
Asia, Canada and Africa. At present, he has just finished two articles--"The
African American Response to Lindbergh's Flight to Paris" and "Alain
Locke: Pragmatism and the Problematic of Personality in the Construction
of Race"--and is working on a book on the African American Press
and the Nineteen Twenties.
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